Abstract

To explore the abandonment rate and factors influencing the use of rigid gas-permeable contact lenses (RGPCL) among children aged < 6 years. This retrospective case series study included 70 children aged < 6 years who were fitted with RGPCL for visual rehabilitation between January 2016 and December 2021. We collected data on indications, discontinuation rates, and reasons for discontinuation from medical records and via telephone calls and investigated the factors influencing contact lens abandonment. The median age of the 70 participants was 5.0 (interquartile range: 4.0-5.9) years. Further, 36 (51.4%) children stopped wearing contact lenses; among them, 17 (47.2%) stopped within 3 months, and the median duration of lens wearing was 4.0 (interquartile range: 1.0-11.5) months. Additionally, there was a correlation between the duration of lens wearing and lens abandonment (r = -0.698, P < 0.001). A high parental education level (hazard ratio [HR] = 0.425; 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.198, 0.913; P = 0.028) was a protective factor against lens abandonment, while parental assessment indicating harder than expected practicality (HR = 4.062; 95% CI 1.204, 13.707; P = 0.024) was a risk factor for abandonment. Children aged < 6 years are susceptible to early discontinuation of RGPCL use. Since parents perform daily lens manipulation, they are crucial to the continuity of lens use in these children. To improve RGPCL use continuity, communication and supervision should be strengthened before and after RGPCL fittings.

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